Computers: ALL I KNOW ABOUT COMPUTERS I LEARNED FROM MY MOTHER

ALL I KNOW ABOUT COMPUTERS I LEARNED F

Computers: ALL I KNOW ABOUT COMPUTERS I LEARNED FROM MY MOTHER



ALL I KNOW ABOUT COMPUTERS I LEARNED FROM MY MOTHER


For years I badgered my mother with questions about whether
the Tooth Fairy is a real person or not. Her answer was always
"Well, you wished for the presents and
they came, didn't they?" I finally understood the full meaning
of her reply when I heard the definition of a virtual device:
"A software or hardware entity which responds
to commands in a manner indistinguishable from the real
device." Mother was telling me that the Tooth Fairy is a
virtual person (simulated by loving parents) who
responds to requests from children in a manner
indistinguishable from the real fairy.

Mother also taught the IF ... THEN ... ELSE structure: "If
it's snowing, then put your boots on before you go to school;
otherwise just wear your shoes."

Mother explained the difference between batch and transaction
processing: "We'll wash the white clothes when we get enough
of them to make a load, but we'll wash
these socks out right now by hand because you'll need them
this afternoon."

Mother taught me about linked lists. Once, for a birthday
party, she laid out a treasure hunt of ten hidden clues, with
each clue telling where to find the next one, and the
last one leading to the treasure. She then gave us the first
clue.

Mother understood about parity errors. When she counted socks
after doing the laundry, she expected to find an even number
and groaned when only one sock of a pair
emerged from the washing machine. Later she applied the
principles of redundancy engineering to this problem by buying
our socks three identical pairs at a time. This
greatly increased the odds of being able to come up with at
least one matching pair.

Mother had all of us children write our Christmas thank you
notes to Grandmother, one after another, on a single large
sheet of paper which was then mailed in a single
envelope with a single stamp. This was obviously an instance
of blocking records in order to save money by reducing the
number of physical I/O operations.

Mother used flags to help her manage the housework. Whenever
she turned on the stove, she put a potholder on top of her
purse to reminder herself to turn it off again
before leaving the house.

Mother knew about devices which raise an interrupt signal to
be serviced when they have completed any operation. She had a
whistling teakettle.

Mother understood about LIFO ordering. In my lunch bag she put
the dessert on the bottom, the sandwich in the middle, and the
napkin on top so that things would come
out in the right order at lunchtime.

There is an old story that God knew He couldn't be physically
present everywhere at once, to show His love for His people,
and so He created mothers. That is the
difference between centralized and distributed
processing. As any kid who's ever misbehaved at a neighbor's
house finds out, all the mothers in the neighborhood talk to
each other. That's a local area network of
distributed processors that can't be beat.

Mom, you were the best computer teacher I ever had.